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What is an infographic?
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All Flashcards in Topic 2.4
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2.4.110 cards
What is an infographic?
Information shown through pictures, numbers and a few words, so it's quick to grasp.
What is an infographic's purpose?
To inform — and very often to persuade, by making a point feel obvious.
Why analyse the visuals, not just the words?
Colour, size, icons and layout are deliberate choices carrying half the meaning.
What is visual hierarchy?
How size and position guide the eye to the main point first.
What is colour coding?
Using colours to signal meaning — green good, red danger.
What is an icon?
A simple picture that stands for an idea.
Why do big numbers work in an infographic?
A huge stat grabs the eye and makes the scale feel shocking or impressive.
What is the strongest move analysing an infographic?
Showing how a word and a visual work together to make a meaning neither could alone.
What does red usually signal in an infographic?
Danger or a negative — while green signals good.
Where is the main message in an infographic?
Usually the biggest item at the top of the visual hierarchy.
2.4.210 cards
What is a political cartoon?
A single funny, exaggerated image that criticises the news through symbols and satire.
What is the purpose of a political cartoon?
To persuade and criticise through satire — mocking something to change how you see it.
What is satire?
Using humour or mockery to criticise something.
What is caricature?
A drawing that exaggerates a person's features to mock a trait.
What is a symbol in a cartoon?
An object that stands for a bigger idea (a dove = peace, a flag = a nation).
How does size work in a cartoon?
Big vs tiny shows power vs weakness.
What does the caption do?
Pins down who's meant and often flips or sharpens the meaning with irony.
What's the key move analysing a cartoon?
Decode each symbol into a meaning, then state the criticism.
Why read every detail in a cartoon?
Nothing is spare — each symbol, label and size is a deliberate choice.
What must your cartoon analysis always name?
The point — the criticism the cartoon argues.
2.4.310 cards
What is a comic strip (as a text type)?
A story told in a sequence of panels using images and words together.
What is the 'gutter'?
The gap between panels; readers fill it in, and it controls timing.
Why does panel order matter?
Setup then payoff — the sequence builds the meaning or joke.
What do speech/thought bubbles show?
Dialogue or thoughts; their shape and size signal tone and volume.
What does exaggeration do in a comic?
Cartoon shorthand — big eyes, sweat drops — quickly shows feeling.
Where is the joke often carried?
In the final panel (the twist) and the gap between panels.
First question to ask of a comic strip?
‘How do the panels and their order build the meaning or joke?’
How do you analyse a bubble's shape?
Say what it signals — a tiny shaky bubble = a timid, weak voice.
Comic strip vs single cartoon?
A strip uses several panels in sequence; a cartoon is one image.
Common comic-analysis mistake?
Describing each panel separately and missing the sequence, gaps and twist.
2.4.410 cards
Why isn't a photo neutral?
The photographer chose the frame, angle, focus, light and moment.
What does 'framing' mean in a photo?
What's included and excluded — the edges are a deliberate choice.
What can a low camera angle do?
Make a subject loom and feel powerful or imposing.
Why does a caption matter?
A few words anchor the meaning; a new caption changes how we read the image.
Name three photo choices to analyse.
Framing (in/out), angle and focus, and light/colour.
How does light build mood?
Warm light feels safe; harsh shadow feels tense — light sets the feeling.
First question to ask of a photograph?
‘What did the photographer choose to show, and how?’
Why consider what's left OUT of a frame?
Exclusion is a choice too — what's missing can shape meaning as much as what's in.
Photograph vs painting?
Both are composed, but a photo also carries a claim of ‘this really happened’.
Common photo-analysis mistake?
Describing the contents instead of analysing the choices and the caption.
2.4.510 cards
What is a documentary (as a text type)?
A film about a real subject whose viewpoint is shaped by narration and selection.
Why isn't a documentary pure fact?
Narration, chosen footage, tone and music all select and shape a viewpoint.
What does narration (voiceover) do?
Guides how you read the images; its word choice sets the angle.
How does selection shape a documentary?
What's shown and left out builds the argument, even while feeling factual.
How do tone and music work?
They steer feeling — solemn, urgent or hopeful — under the ‘facts’.
Why does the ‘fact’ framing matter?
Claiming to show reality makes the viewpoint feel objective and trustworthy.
First question to ask of a documentary?
‘Whose viewpoint is this, and how is it built?’
Loaded narration example?
Calling a plan ‘an experiment on a town’ casts residents as test subjects.
Documentary vs news report?
Both claim fact, but a documentary crafts a sustained viewpoint through narration and footage.
Common documentary-analysis mistake?
Treating it as pure fact and missing how narration and selection build a viewpoint.
2.4.610 cards
What is a film still?
A single frame from a film, in which everything is deliberately arranged.
What is 'mise-en-scène'?
Everything arranged in the frame — setting, lighting, costume, props, position.
How does lighting/colour work in a still?
Warm light feels safe; cold blue or harsh shadow feels tense or sad.
What does a high camera angle suggest?
The subject looks small, weak or vulnerable.
What does position in the frame show?
Placement (centre/edge, big/small, high/low) signals power and mood.
Name three film-still elements to analyse.
Setting/props, lighting/colour, and position of people in the frame.
First question to ask of a film still?
‘What has the director arranged in this frame, and why?’
What do costume and props reveal?
Clues to who a character is, their situation and how they feel.
Film still vs photograph?
Both are composed; a still is a frame from a constructed fiction, rich in mise-en-scène.
Common film-still analysis mistake?
Describing the scene instead of analysing the arrangement and what it suggests.
Topic 2.4 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Visual & screen
English A Lang & Lit exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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